Teenager Amelia, deaf yet learning to hear through a cochlear implant, lives a sheltered life with her over-protective parents. Then she goes to stay with her aunt and uncle, who reside in the centre of Bristol. Inner-city excitement beckons, until Amelia witnesses a murder that links her uncle's work as a homicide copper with her cousins' party lifestyles. The first episode of a four-part thriller is a slow-burner, but it's worth sticking around for strong performances, especially newcomer Genevieve Barr (born deaf) as Amelia, and a script that weaves coming-of-age issues into the narrative. Continues tomorrow.

Rich Hall's The Dirty South

9pm, BBC4

The deep south of the US is the last place it's polite to be rude about; one may, in civilised company, denigrate the region as a backward swamp of moonshine-swigging cross-burners without receiving much in the way of outraged contradiction. Rich Hall knows the region pretty well, but has lived outside it long enough to be an ideal host of this tour of the south's heritage, history and humour. Hall is unsparing about the drawbacks, but gruffly passionate about its splendours, of which there are many, and he is, as ever, smart and funny with it.

Identity

9pm, ITV1

Straight out of Maverick Cop School comes Identity's John Bloom (Aidan Gillen) – undercover for so long, he has precious little idea who he is any more. Still, whatever backstory he has simmering away, he makes for a pretty lively presence in this second episode of ITV1's cop drama. When an affluent backpacker is murdered in Australia, the Identity Unit get a lesson that identity theft isn't necessarily always financially motivated – and it needs all of John's tearing up of the rulebook to get to the bottom of things.

Concorde's Last Flight

9pm, Channel 4

There are two sides to Concorde. On the one hand it was an aesthetic masterpiece, a technological wonder which captured the public's imagination. On the other, it was a political folly paid for by taxpayers – most of whom would never be able to afford the exorbitant fares – and a polluting menace. This documentary recounts the story of the world's only supersonic passenger plane, and the controversy over the fatal crash 10 years ago.

All You Need Is Love

9pm, Sky Arts 1

First broadcast in the mid-70s, this 17-episode overview of the history of popular music was the work of journalist Tony Palmer who, at the suggestion of John Lennon, set about interviewing everyone. In this opener we see incredible scenes of Jerry Lee Lewis looking terrifying as he beats up a piano during Great Balls Of Fire and the Rolling Stones casually stepping out in front of a huge stadium audience. It makes for evocative viewing, and features everything from tribal drumming in Africa to an elderly Hoagy Carmichael defining the blues.

Sky Arts Gets Animated

10pm, Sky Arts 1

While movies can barely be said to even exist these days without the help of 3D or IMAX, there are still plenty of film-makers content to use the oldest trick in the cinematic book: animation. So, on selected weeknights at 10pm a new animated short is being shown, many enjoying their UK premieres. There's the Oscar-nominated satire of Runaway from Cordell Barker, the wonderful Forming Game (shown tonight) where images flit from abstract to recognisable, the cave painting-inspired Hungu – all showing that animation is as alive now as it's ever been.